The National Commission for Colleges of Education has officially introduced a groundbreaking structural overhaul that will fundamentally alter the tertiary education landscape across Nigeria. The newly unveiled Dual Mandate Policy officially empowers qualified Colleges of Education to independently award Bachelor’s Degrees in Education alongside the traditional Nigeria Certificate in Education.
The policy, which stems from the Federal Colleges of Education Act signed into law by President Bola Tinubu, is slated for full institutional rollout beginning with the 2026/2027 academic session. According to NCCE Executive Secretary, Angela Ajala, the intervention is engineered to aggressively decompress the bottleneck of university admissions while restoring systemic prestige to teacher training.
The core operational change eliminates the historical affiliation bottleneck, where Colleges of Education were legally barred from running degree programs unless they paired with and operated under the strict curriculum boundaries of a parent university. Under the previous framework, degree-awarding power was restricted to parent universities, and academic regulation was multi-layered, separating the certificates across different commissions.
The new system provides fully autonomous degree-awarding powers for qualified colleges, introducing an integrated five-year model where an individual can achieve both qualifications seamlessly. It also creates a flexible milestone that allows students to exit at year three with their certificate or bridge directly into their bachelor’s degree.
The academic pathway under this new framework functions as a progressive, quality-controlled filter, allowing institutions to significantly expand access to higher education while maintaining rigorous professional teaching benchmarks. During years one to three, students gain admission directly into the College of Education under a more flexible entry framework, focusing entirely on core pedagogical foundations, classroom psychology, and subject-matter basics. At the end of year three, students complete their foundational coursework and earn their standard Nigeria Certificate in Education, which remains the foundational professional certification for basic education in Nigeria.
To transition automatically into the advanced degree component, students must hit specific performance benchmarks, including a minimum of five O’Level credit passes. Those who do not meet this standard exit cleanly with their certificate, while eligible students proceed immediately into an intensive, two-year advanced degree component focused on emerging educational technologies, classroom problem-solving, and advanced pedagogical theory, graduating with a Bachelor’s Degree in Education.
The immediate and long-term implications of this policy reform stretch across multiple sectors of Nigerian higher education. By opening up twenty-eight federal colleges and expanding to state and private institutions that domesticate the framework, millions of candidates who traditionally over-saturate university admission lists now have a direct, independent pathway to a degree.
Furthermore, the integrated framework introduces a heavy lean into twenty-first-century classroom demands, shifting away from chalkboard-only practices to focus explicitly on digital literacy, artificial intelligence awareness, emotional intelligence, and STEM education. This actively strips away the historical bias of teacher training being treated as a fallback or lesser academic choice, establishing it instead as an autonomous, professional development pathway.
While the NCCE manages the execution across colleges, the final draft curriculum has been harmonized with the National Universities Commission to guarantee that an independent college degree holds the exact same structural weight, prestige, and market value as a university degree.














